Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • In lumps; in a lumpish or awkward manner: heavily; with dullness or stupidity.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adverb In a lumpish manner.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

lumpish +‎ -ly

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Examples

  • Only now, 30 years after his death, has he been accorded a biography, which, typically, is not a very good one—humorless, lumpishly written and utterly devoid of the raffish yet paradoxically doomy spirit that moved his best work.

    We Shall Not See His Like Again Richard Schickel 2011

  • But gah, that submission for next week is being very stubborn and keeps lying there lumpishly on the page.

    Cat Rambo catrambo 2007

  • Our dear Merdle would then receive his instructions; and would sit heavily among the company at table and wander lumpishly about his drawing – rooms afterwards, only remarkable for appearing to have nothing to do with the entertainment beyond being in its way.

    Little Dorrit 2007

  • But the fiendish glowing screens had another, far eviller plan (yes, "eviller" is now a word; get over it), and before I was three-quarters through "The Importance of Being Ernest," I was sitting lumpishly in front of one of them for far longer than anyone could consider healthy -- clicking away mindlessly, oblivious to those around me and whether or not they were downloading porn (goat or otherwise).

    bluemeany Diary Entry bluemeany 2005

  • Hendrix succeeds almost uniformly in blending spy-caper action with mind-boggling discourse quite believably and non-lumpishly.

    Asimov's Science Fiction 2004

  • He draped himself grotesquely in his toweling bathrobe and a pink and white couch-cover, and sat lumpishly in a wing-chair.

    Babbit 2004

  • His report on the acoustical work, lumpishly titled “The Song of the Indris Indri indri; Primates: Lemuroidea: Natural History, Form, and Function,” was published in the International Journal of Primatology.

    The Song of The Dodo David Quammen 2004

  • His report on the acoustical work, lumpishly titled “The Song of the Indris Indri indri; Primates: Lemuroidea: Natural History, Form, and Function,” was published in the International Journal of Primatology.

    The Song of The Dodo David Quammen 2004

  • To his thinking, Purdy had cut a poor figure during the visit: he had said no intelligent word, but had lounged lumpishly in his chair — the very picture of the country man come up to the metropolis — and, growing tired of this, had gone like a restless child to thrum his fingers on the panes.

    Australia Felix 2003

  • None of her three ever grabbed, or gobbled, or drank with a full mouth; nor were they either lumpishly shy or over-forward, like the general ruck of colonial children.

    Ultima Thule 2003

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